Here's a super quick guide to what traders are talking about right now

Traders
works on the floor of the New York Stock
ExchangeThomson
Reuters

Via Dave Lutz at JonesTrading, here's a quick guide to what
traders are talking about before the opening bell on Monday:

Good Morning, and welcome to “Cyber Monday!” I have been working
on the “Wall Street Holiday Gift List” this AM, and have to say
that every website I pulled up was flashing outrageous deals.
This week we get the ECB, NFP, ADP, OPEC, BoC, RBI, RBA, ISM Mfg,
Factory Orders, EU PMIs, CAD jobs and a slew of speakers – ahead
of that US Futures are tracking higher, led by a 40bp pop in the
Russell which is well outpacing the S&P’s 5bp advance.
Markets in Europe are all in Rally Mode, with Germany’s DAX
adding nearly 1% with every sector advancing, led by a 2% pop in
Discretionary shares. The FTSE is lagging though as the
Financials and Miners retreat, offsetting the gains in that
discretionary sector – Overall Volumes in Europe are average to
last 20days. Asian Volumes were strong on MSCI semi-annual
rebalance day with most markets rolling over into the close -
Shanghai rallied slightly into the green, reversing losses of
over 3% after Friday’s smackdown – While the Kospi was hit for
almost 2% on weaker Industrial Production numbers. Both Japan and
Aussie lost 69bp, as negative momentum in the miners returned,
with BHP plunging to new multi-year lows.

The US 10YY is up small, but Fed Funds have moved to a 76% chance
of liftoff in a few weeks, and that “Policy Sensitive” 2YY is
breaking to new highs ahead of that Jobs Report on Friday, along
with Multiple Fed Speakers, including Yellen twice, along with
the Beige Book. The DXY remains bid above 100, as Euro remains
under 1.06 as we await the ECB later this week, and the Yen broke
south on weaker Japanese IP. Despite this headwind, most
commodities are in the green, with Copper adding 60bp and even
Gold staging a slight rally off lows. The Crude Complex is whippy
ahead of OPEC Friday, with WTI and Brent tentatively holding 1%
gains early. Natty gas remains in the green despite warmer
weather on the East Coast, while Softs are all mixed early.

Ahead of us today, we have the IMF decision on the Chinese Yuan
SDR inclusion, at 8:30 the Fed Board to meet on Dodd-Frank
amendments, at 9am we get ISM Milwaukee ahead of that 9:45
release of the Chicago Purchasing Manager (9:43 for paying subs).
10am brings us Pending Home Sales for October, and 10:30 we get
the Dallas Fed Manf. Activity. At 3pm we get US Agricultural
Prices, and 3:30 brings the delayed “Commitment of Traders” data
from the CFTC. President Obama is in Paris for climate talks,
while today brings the Deadline for EPA final rule on ethanol
blending quotas, known as the Renewable Fuel Standard.